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Basic, But Vital

April 11, 2011

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ATLANTA -- The annual business/town meeting at this year’s Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) was perhaps most notable for its speed and brevity, moving at a brisk pace through a routine 13-item agenda.

But the meeting’s rather prosaic mood took a turn toward the end, when William Lalicker, professor of English at West Chester University, in Pennsylvania, took the floor to propose a “sense of the house” motion on the importance of basic writing. Lalicker is a former chair and executive board member of the Council on Basic Writing (CBW), whose members organized a hasty but energetic last-minute push to compose their motion and propose it at the business meeting.

“Be it resolved,” Lalicker read aloud, “that basic writing is a vital field and its students and teacher scholars a productive force within composition; is under attack by exclusionary public policies; and therefore must be recognized publicly and supported by CCCC as a conference cluster and with featured sessions.”

Basic writing, perhaps more commonly known as remedial or developmental English, is certainly less sexy, and arguably less prestigious, than many of the other subfields of composition and communication, such as theory, creative writing, and rhetoric. But, Lalicker and his CBW colleagues argued, it is not only a crucial part of composition, but a nexus of broader social issues: “Labor, justice, access and equity all come together around basic writing,” Lalicker told Inside Higher Ed. (The relationship between basic writing and social justice is an ongoing topic of discussion among CBW members.)

But the field has been marginalized, the CBW's members say, by a confluence of ill political and social winds -- with the result that many four-year institutions no longer offer basic writing, and the two-year colleges that do don't have space (or funding) for all their would-be students. “If there’s anything good about the American education system,” said Lalicker, it’s that, for students whose high school education didn’t provide them with all the competencies they need, “there’s always been the notion that you can get into a community college or a state four-year school and make it up there. And now you can’t.”

The pattern is one of ever-decreasing access for the students with the most need, and ever-decreasing visibility for those who teach them -- since two-year college faculty are less likely than their four-year counterparts to be able to attend meetings like the CCCC, and tend to command less attention in the public discourse, as well.

This reduced visibility is what the CBW now hopes to combat, with Saturday's sense-of-the-house motion being the first step. While basic writing has been under deliberate attack in the public policy sphere, its fading influence at the CCCC has been more a matter of neglect, said Peter Adams, a CBW executive board member and professor of English at the Community College of Baltimore County. "Basic writing isn't nearly as chichi as it was back in the '80s," Adams said, and the CCCC's "attention has gone to other -- very worthwhile -- activities."

Thus basic writing has not had, for a number of years, its own "conference cluster" -- conference clusters being the 13 or so subgroups around which the CCCC is organized, with every proposal required to fall under one of them. (Lynn Quitman Troyka, adjunct professor in the graduate program in language and literacy at the City College of New York, noted that in the CCCC's 2012 call for program proposals, basic writing, which is part of the area cluster of "Teaching Writing & Rhetoric," isn't even listed as a separate category within that cluster, but is rather in the category of "Basic, first-year, advanced, [and] ESL." "Basic writing is meshed into ESL?" Troyka said, noting that the two are very distinct fields. "Come on. What's that?")

Basic writing has also not been the subject of any "featured session" -- one listed in the program with a separate box of at least a full page, including photographs and background information -- in some years, the CBW members said.

A cluster of its own at an annual professional conference, and maybe a page or two in the program, might seem like trivial goals for a group that sees its work as a force for justice, access and equity. But these changes would in fact have a great impact, said Seth Kahn, an associate professor of English at West Chester. "Everything that happens at these conferences is so catalyzing," Kahn said. "It's what sets the agenda for a lot of what we do ... just to have the authorizing move of saying, 'Yeah, you count,' is very important.

"The most important thing about visibility is that it helps people find you."

The CBW's motion certainly got plenty of visibility at Saturday's business meeting. After Lalicker proposed it, three other CBW members spoke in support; several more were lined up to do so when CCCC chair Gwendolyn Pough, associate professor of women's and gender studies, writing, and rhetoric at Syracuse University, who was presiding over the meeting, broke in to ask whether there was anyone who wanted to speak against the motion. There wasn't. So Pough put the motion to a vote; it passed, unanimously.

Upon the motion's passage, Chris Anson, CCCC assistant chair and University Distinguished Professor of English at North Carolina State University, said, "I have no objections at all to a stronger focus on basic writing, and we can work that out in the [conference] planning process." The audience responded with enthusiastic applause, and Pough moved on to the next item of business.

"I teach anywhere from two to four basic writing classes a semester," Michael Hill, an instructor in the English and world languages division at Henry Ford Community College, in Dearborn, Michigan, told Inside Higher Ed after the meeting. "And the real importance of this resolution today is that it's asking this community to support basic writing teachers.

"When I'm in that classroom, I need that sense of support. This organization can provide that support."

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Comments on Basic, But Vital

  • Garnering Recognition
  • Posted by midwest cc prof , English Professor at Midwest CC on April 11, 2011 at 6:45am EDT
  • Thank you, IHE, for focusing on the issues of Basic Writing today. Basic Writing is a vital, vibrant, richly traditioned, well-researched part of higher education. And, yet, it is beleaguered, misunderstood, and maligned so often in the media. It is refreshing to see a story that so carefully captures the concerns and words of basic writing teachers.
  • Well deserved recognition
  • Posted by Marisa Klages , Associate Professor/English at LaGuardia Community College on April 11, 2011 at 8:00am EDT
  • Although I couldn't attend the Business Meeting at 4C's, I was there for the CBW meeting when the sense of the house motion was discussed.
    It is vital that the Conference on College Composition and Communication recognize and validate Basic Writing as a field within Composition and Rhetoric. At most community colleges more than 40% of entering students need some form of basic writing; these are the same students 4-year colleges will often have once the students graduate (or transfer) from community college. I'm very glad that the conference has agreed to more recognition for this important field.

    Marisa
  • BW at 2012 conference
  • Posted by Chris Anson , Professor and Director, CWSP at North Carolina State University on April 11, 2011 at 9:00am EDT
  • If the intuitions of those who spoke at the annual business meeting are right, then this is a problem that needs attention. Basic writing has always been an important part of the CCCC and its membership, and it remains a crucially important area of higher education and our continuing efforts toward access and the further preparation for all aspiring students. The theme of next year's conference--which focuses on both the positive and negative aspects of "gateways" and the transitions students make as learners--lends itself to a strong focus on these issues, and I'll be working hard to ensure that they are represented in St. Louis.
  • attending to basic writers
  • Posted by Howard Tinberg , Professor/English at Bristol Community College on April 11, 2011 at 9:15am EDT
  • I am pleased to see CCCC return its gaze to the teaching of basic writing. As a community college faculty member, I am concerned that two-year colleges, in an effort to follow the lead of four-year institutions, may jettison their comprehensive mission to address the varied needs of adult learners.
  • serving the real students - our bottom line
  • Posted by Karin Evans , Associate Professor of English at College of DuPage on April 11, 2011 at 10:15am EDT
  • I see a lot of danger in the common, happy myth that better alignment of standards and curriculum (and more standardized testing, of course) will enable all high school graduates to enter directly into college-level courses. Then, the story goes, all the work that goes into teaching developmental courses at the college level will not be necessary any more.

    In reality... this is not going to happen. Community colleges in particular will always serve students who have gaps in their education. We will always need effective, responsive programming in areas like Basic Writing to meet the real needs of the real students in our institutions - not the hopeful fictions invented by the alignment of standards.

    Thanks to everyone who participated in raising the profile of Basic Writing at 4C's. See you in St Louis (which is close enough for me to get to without travel funding - my institution does not provide any).
  • Vital Signs--Heartbeat of Higher Education
  • Posted by J. Elizabeth Clark , Professor of English at LaGuardia Community College on April 11, 2011 at 10:15am EDT
  • I cannot thank the house enough for its critical support of Basic Writing. In these historic times of limiting access to higher education and the decrease of public funding for higher education, it is essential that we continue to press for access, inclusion, and equality for all students whether they begin in Basic Writing or not. This work begins "at home," by ensuring that Basic Writing is recognized as an essential part of the mission of CCCC and composition studies.
  • Creative Writing is NOT a Subfield of Composition!
  • Posted by Creative Writer on April 11, 2011 at 1:45pm EDT
  • Anyone who thinks so is woefully misinformed and should run, not walk, to D. W. Fenza's essays online at http://awpwriter.org . Composition is not the umbrella, the Politburo, the gatekeeper to All Things Writing. I would also point out that Lalicker is one of many fine creative writers who teach basic writing (another is Poet Laureate Kay Ryan), putting the lie to those who claim creative writers think themselves "too good" to teach beginners.
  • The next challenge
  • Posted by Dave on April 11, 2011 at 1:45pm EDT
  • The next challenge for basic writing is to get our institutions to take it seriously--in two senses. First, all of our instituions (and I mean you too, Harvard) have students who need basic writing, and all have a responsibility to meet the educational needs of the students they admit. The second challenge is tougher, maybe. Our institutions have to recognize that teaching and research in basic writing (and math, and reading, etc.)require faculty who are as good and well-trained as the top scholars in any other academic specialization. There is nothing "basic" about about the intellectual challenge of figuring out how to help adult learners achieve levels of literacy needed to be successful in higher education and in their lives and careers. A lot of people know how to make their subjects and verbs agree. The problem is coming to understand how one learns to do this. This notion that less well-prepared students can be taught by less well-prepared faculty just makes me crazy.
  • Who said anything about Creative Writing?
  • Posted by Seth Kahn , Associate Prof of English at West Chester U of PA on April 11, 2011 at 5:45pm EDT
  • @Creative Writer:

    Who said anything about comp being the "umbrella" for Creative Writing? Not one of us involved in the interview that led to this article, or in the CCCC Business Meeting at which the motion was passed, said such a thing--neither do I think any of us believes it.

    Not sure where the animus is coming from, but I assure it's misplaced.
  • Why Celebrate Basic Writing?
  • Posted by Lynn Quitman Troyka , Adjunct Professor, MA Program in Language & Literacy at City College of New York, CUNY on April 11, 2011 at 7:30pm EDT
  • Lest any readers of this report be tempted to think that Basic Writers(BWs)/Basic Writing (BW) don't belong in college, permit me to share my story about why I loved to teach BW for 17 years at an urban community college. The first day of my BW classes, I'd require an in-class essay, and I'd see tortured starts, erasures, restarts, along with chagrined or embarassed faces when they handed me the single paragraph or two they had managed to compose. During the last week of class, those same faces were smiling broadly, staring at their papers in amazement, and even shedding a few tears after I handed them their first writing along with their most recent writing assignment. Their final in-class assignment was to write an essay that compared the two writings and gave their overall onservations about their progress. The silent engagement in the room was palpable. They filled pages with confidence, joy, and impressive skill. Most important, almost all those BWs went on to finish their degrees, sometimes "stopping out" for a semester or two to save up money to return (the statistical studies don't take into account "stopped out" and returned students).

    The average age of our students was 27. Most merely needed to be reminded of what they had learned in high school, some had to learn what hadn't been covered in overcrowded urban high schools. Now after taking BW, each had a chance for social and economic mobility--and for contributing meaningfuly to our society.
  • Basic Writing at CCCC 2011
  • Posted by Barbara Gleason , Associate Professor, English at City College of New York on April 12, 2011 at 4:30am EDT
  • I was present for both the CCCC CBW pre-conference workshop and the CCCC Annual Business Meeting. Thank you, IHE, for reporting so accurately and fully on the Sense of the House Motion that Bill Lalicker read at the CCCC Annual business meeting. Bringing basic writing back into the the forefront of Composition Studies has special importance now, as public colleges are losing much needed funding and basic writing/reading and math programs are being reduced or eliminated.

    Barbara Gleason
    Associate Professor, English
    Director, MA, Language & Literacy
    City College of New York, CUNY
  • CBW at CCCC
  • Posted by BW Teacher in NJ on April 12, 2011 at 10:15am EDT
  • I'd like to thank IHE for an excellent article and the CBW members who were involved at CCCC. I have been fortunate to teach at a community college that (for the most part) values basic writing and those who teach it. I've met far too many other teachers of basic writing who are not as lucky. They (and their students) are misunderstood and marginalized within their own departments. A voice at CCCC is crucial for basic writing instructors who work against the grain every day at home.
  • Thanks to BW instructors
  • Posted by lan on April 12, 2011 at 11:00am EDT
  • As a prof in a liberal arts dept, I wish most of my students had taken a basic writing course. I work in a state where test taking is the focus of K-12 education and it seems to be the only skill that students seem proficient at by the time they reach college. I struggle to teach them basic writing skills in my courses, but it's a challenge to balance the needs of the course with developing this skill. And teaching basic writing is not part of my skill set so it's a trial and error process for me. So I just want to thank you all for bringing basic writing to the fore.
  • Long support for our CBW & our students
  • Posted by Karen S. Uehling , Associate Professor, English at Boise State University on April 12, 2011 at 11:30am EDT
  • I was at both the CBW workshop and Special Interest Group meeting at the CCCC where the sense of the house motion was formulated, and I appreciate this thorough article with informative links. I have been involved with basic writing since 1976 and with CBW for 30 years; I was the second Chair of the organization. I deeply believe that the most disenfranchised citizens in this country deserve the best possible access to education. Over many years we have determined that writing instruction is a human centered endeavor—it cannot be taught through grammar workbooks or workbooks on computer. Writers need to be heard, to write full texts, and to receive thoughtful feedback, and their instructors need the resources to provide this kind of informed teaching. These are the principles that CBW espouses, and why I continue to advocate for our students and to work with CBW.
  • Creative Writing--comes from the program
  • Posted by J. Elizabeth Clark , Professor of English at LaGuardia Community College on April 12, 2011 at 12:00pm EDT
  • Dave and Seth, I believe the list is coming from the Chair's Address blurb, printed in the CCCC Program on page 72, which mentions creative writing and creative writers, among other things, but not Basic Writing.
  • also needed at 4-year institutions and foreign language
  • Posted by felixfelix , Lang/Lit at BarelyResearch1Private on April 12, 2011 at 2:30pm EDT
  • I add that the profile and prestige of the teaching of basic language courses in both English and foreign languages should be increased at four-year institutions as well, for the same reasons. Basic courses in one's native language or another involve teaching-learning how to structure sentences in a clear, logical way and how to think through what one wishes to say in order to phrase it so that others understand it. Ironically, appreciation of these skills has declined at the same time that complaints about the widespread inability to write coherently have increased.
    Basic language courses also offer valuable insights into human culture and categorization of the world: in teaching basic courses of a Romance language to English speakers, for example, one can point out how the differences in the two languages' causative constructions correspond with the Augustinian (Mediterranean world)-Pelagian (Northern European world) divide.
  • and reading skills, too
  • Posted by felixfelix , Lang/Lit at BarelyResearch1Private on April 12, 2011 at 3:15pm EDT
  • My apologies and red face that my comment (inadvertently) showed that I had skimmed the article too quickly to realize that CCCC does not refer solely to community colleges.
  • Basic Writing at 2012 CCCC
  • Posted by Liz Bryant , Associate Professor of English at Purdue University Calumet on April 12, 2011 at 7:00pm EDT
  • One way to make sure BW has more of a presence at CCCC is for basic writing teachers to speak and present at the next conference in St. Louis. Talk to your fellow teachers and submit a workshop or panel.
  • We are all basic.
  • Posted by Mary Ann Kerwin , Writing Consultant at Brookdale Community College Writing Center on April 12, 2011 at 8:15pm EDT
  • As a tutor at a community college writing center, I have learned more from my basic writers than I have taught them. I have learned mostly that thinking happens regardless of one’s ease in putting words on a paper. Every writer, no matter what skill level, goes through the same process. I have learned that in a sense, we are all basic writers. Thanks to all who are bringing this important issue to the forefront.
  • Basic Writers
  • Posted by Sue Henderson , Instructor of English at East Central College on April 13, 2011 at 4:00pm EDT
  • As a community college instructor, I spend a fair portion of my teaching load with basic writers. At my institution, we use the term "developmental students" because students enrolled in Intro to Writing are highly likely to be enrolled in developmental Math and Reading courses as well. Understanding this larger scope of academic issues faced by "developmental" students--not just Basic Writers--is important for anyone who teaches in both two and four year schools.

    A common misconceptions among my colleagues in other disciplines is that they don’t teach developmental students—as if there are none in their classes. Students who complete a semester of Basic Writing don't automatically shed their myriad writing or academic challenges. Such students will continue to need certain things from all of us as teachers, no matter what course we find them in. If we continue to address the needs of this large portion of our student population at community colleges—and we extend that understanding beyond the Basic Writing or Developmental classroom--we can only help our students. And that’s the point, right?